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Tardigrade ANIMAL

They are hardy little creatures. There are over 1,100 different species which can live in a variety of environments such as sand, fresh water, and the sea. Some eat plants and others eat meat. They may reproduce sexually or asexually. They can survive extremely low temperatures and dry conditions. During extremely dry conditions, their bodies can go into a “tun” state where their bodies dry out and form a lifeless balls. They may survive in a tun state for decades and possibly centuries until their environment becomes more hospitable and they rehydrate. They can also survive without air, helium, exposed for several hours to a temperature of -272C, and 21 months in liquid air at a temperature of 190C. Tardigrades are easily distributed by wind and water while in the tun state. Click here to read the full article or an excerpt below.

A scanning electron micrograph of a tardigrade, or water bear. Tardigrades are invertebrates that … are related to: invertebrate, flatworm, mollusk,

Tardigrade (phylum Tardigrada), also called water bear or moss piglet, any of more than 1,100 species of free-living tiny invertebrates belonging to the phylum Tardigrada. They are considered to be close relatives of arthropods (e.g., insects, crustaceans). Tardigrades are mostly about 1 mm (0.04 inch) or less in size. They live in a variety of habitats worldwide: in damp moss, on flowering plants, in sand, in fresh water, and in the sea. In adapting to this wide range of external conditions, a large number of genera and species have evolved.

Tardigrades have a well-developed head region and a short body composed of four fused segments, with each segment bearing a pair of short, stout, unjointed limbs generally terminated by several sharp claws. The animals have no known specialized organs of circulation or respiration; the tardigrade’s body cavity (hemocoel) is filled with fluid that transports blood and oxygen (the latter of which diffuses through the animal’s integument and is stored in cells within the hemocoel). The alimentary canaltraverses the body from end to end. Most plant-eating tardigrades feed by piercing individual plant cells with their stylets (spearlike structures near the mouth) and then sucking out the cell contents. A few tardigrades are predatory carnivores. Tardigrades may reproduce sexually or through asexual reproduction (by means of parthenogenesis or through self-fertilization [hermaphroditism]). Eggs are discharged either into the posterior end of the alimentary canal or directly to the exterior through an opening in front of the anus.

The most remarkable feature of the tardigrades is their ability to withstand extremely low temperatures and desiccation (extreme drying). Under unfavourable conditions, they go into a state of suspended animation called the “tun” state—in which the body drys out and appears as a lifeless ball (or tun). In this state their metabolism may decline to as little as 0.01 percent of its normal rate. Tardigrades can survive as tuns for years, or even decades, to wait out dry conditions. In addition, specimens kept for eight days in a vacuum, transferred for three days into helium gas at room temperature, and then exposed for several hours to a temperature of −272 °C (−458 °F) came to life again when they were brought to normal room temperature. Sixty percent of specimens kept for 21 months in liquid air at a temperature of −190 °C (−310 °F) also revived. Tardigrades are easily distributed by wind and water while in the tun state.